Heavy Color-Octet Particles at the LHC
Many new-physics models, especially those with a color-triplet top-quark partner, contain a heavy color-octet state. The "naturalness" argument for a light Higgs boson requires that the color-octet state be not much heavier than a TeV, and thus it can be pair-produced with large cross sect...
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Zusammenfassung: | Many new-physics models, especially those with a color-triplet top-quark
partner, contain a heavy color-octet state. The "naturalness" argument for a
light Higgs boson requires that the color-octet state be not much heavier than
a TeV, and thus it can be pair-produced with large cross sections at
high-energy hadron colliders. It may decay preferentially to a top quark plus a
top-partner, which subsequently decays to a top quark plus a color-singlet
state. This singlet can serve as a WIMP dark-matter candidate. Such decay
chains lead to a spectacular signal of four top quarks plus missing energy. We
pursue a general categorization of the color-octet states and their decay
products according to their spin and gauge quantum numbers. We review the
current bounds on the new states at the LHC and study the expected discovery
reach at the 8-TeV and 14-TeV runs. We also present the production rates at a
future 100-TeV hadron collider, where the cross sections will be many orders of
magnitude greater than at the 14-TeV LHC. Furthermore, we explore the extent to
which one can determine the color octet's mass, spin, and chiral couplings.
Finally, we propose a test to determine whether the fermionic color octet is a
Majorana particle. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1410.8113 |